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1 Peter Wilson, Yongjin Zhang, Tonny Brems Knudsen, Peter Wilson, Paul Sharp, Cornelia Navari, and Barry Buzan The English School in retrospect and prospect: Barry Buzan s an introduction to the English School of International Relations: the societal approach Article (Accepted version) (Refereed) Original citation: Wilson, Peter, Zhang, Yongjin, Knudsen, Tonny Brems, Wilson, Peter, Sharp, Paul, Navari, Cornelia and Buzan, Barry (2016) The English School in retrospect and prospect: Barry Buzan s an introduction to the English School of International Relations: the societal approach. Cooperation and Conflict, 51 (1). pp ISSN DOI: / The Authors This version available at: Available in LSE Research Online: February 2016 LSE has developed LSE Research Online so that users may access research output of the School. Copyright and Moral Rights for the papers on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. Users may download and/or print one copy of any article(s) in LSE Research Online to facilitate their private study or for non-commercial research. You may not engage in further distribution of the material or use it for any profit-making activities or any commercial gain. You may freely distribute the URL ( of the LSE Research Online website. This document is the author s final accepted version of the journal article. There may be differences between this version and the published version. You are advised to consult the publisher s version if you wish to cite from it.

2 Review Symposium The English School in Retrospect and Prospect: Barry Buzan s An Introduction to the English School of International Relations: The Societal Approach For publication in: Cooperation and Conflict 15 (1) 2016 Introduction by Symposium Editor Over the last few decades the English School has not only emerged, but has been acknowledged as a distinctive approach to the study of International Relations (IR). It is routinely listed in textbooks and disciplinary surveys as one of IR s primary modes of inquiry, attracting interest and adherents in many parts of the world. This state of affairs is attributable to the work of a number of people, but especially to that of Barry Buzan. More than reconvening the school, a metaphor misleading in some ways, Buzan has led, pushed and challenged his colleagues to better clarify and define their ideas, concepts and theories, as well as to put the English School on a much sounder organizational footing. Buzan s latest book builds on his previous (2004) volume to provide an introduction for readers new to the school. But it does much more than this, providing a state of the debate on such demanding matters as the expansion of international society, and the pluralist-solidarist divide. It also links present research efforts to the classics, putting into perspective and defining the school s current research agenda for the next phase of its development. It has the potential to become a landmark work on a par with the classic work of the early English School, Hedley Bull s The Anarchical Society. But how does Buzan s research agenda respond to the requirements of an increasingly diverse and fragmenting discipline? Are his preferred analytical concepts and categories sound? Of what pitfalls should newcomers to the school be made aware? In this symposium five established scholars closely associated with the English School seek to answer these questions, and in dialogue with Buzan, further advance our understanding of the school s societal approach and its 1

3 potential for deepening our understanding of what at times appears a highly unsocial world. The approach of the section is internal as opposed to external critique. External critiques of the English School are well known (see e.g. Finnemore, 2001). The section proceeds on the assumption that at this stage of its development the school s approach can be most effectively advanced by vigorous debate between those who share the same broad research agenda with little purpose being served by reiterating the already well known external objections. The symposium is based on a roundtable discussion held at the EISA conference, Warsaw, September 2013, in which Zhang, Wilson, Navari, and Buzan took part. I am grateful to these contributors as well as to Knudsen and Sharp for their timely and thought-provoking contributions. Peter Wilson, London School of Economics and Political Science 2

4 Pluralism, Solidarism and the Yin-Yang of International Society Yongjin Zhang, School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies, University of Bristol, UK Keywords: English School; international society; solidarism; pluralism; primary institutions An Introduction to the English School of International Relations (hereafter IESIR) by Barry Buzan is written in the true spirit of the English School (hereafter ES) theorizing of international relations as a great conversation. Purporting to provide a comprehensive guide to the English School s approach to international society that will serve the needs of beginners (Buzan, 2014: vii), IESIR is purposively framed into historical/structural and normative accounts of the ES approaches to theorizing. This entails a methodological separation of the two accounts of the ES. This is, however, paralleled by Buzan s attempts at a comprehensive synthesis of the historical/structural and normative thrusts of the ES as a holistic theoretical tradition in his deliberation. Some readers may find Buzan s elaborations of the normative orientations of the ES (in Part III) also inescapably structural, particularly in his historical and evolutionary account of the rise and demise of primary institutions, whether pluralist or solidarist in nature. It would hardly escape any careful reader s attention that IESIR is heavily biased towards an account of the normative orientation of the ES, not in the least because the length that IESIR devotes to the consideration of the normative side of the ES story. It is also because of Buzan s declared intention to use this introductory text to intervene in the normative debates between pluralism and solidarism within the ES, which has generated some unnecessary heat (Buzan, 2014: 170). In some existing accounts, pluralism and solidarism have been presented as a proverbial and largely mutually exclusive duality in the evolution of international society with a legendary division of pluralist wing vis-à-vis a solidarist wing within the ES (Bain, 2014: 165; Hurrell, 2014: 147). In other accounts, 3

5 pluralism and solidarism are billed as situated at the heart of the English School theorizing enterprise, since a vocabulary of pluralism and solidarism has been increasingly used to empirically describe, theoretically explain and normatively evaluate the transformation of international society (Bain, 2014: 167-8). It is clear that recent ES scholarship has invested so much in this debate that the stakes for the protagonists of each side, and more generally for the English School s standing as theory (Buzan, 2014: vii), have never been higher. Pluralism/Solidarism debate and divide It is revealing that Buzan frames his discussion of the normative orientations of the ES as pluralism and solidarism, not pluralism versus solidarism. Buzan s analytical and synthetic narrative of the normative story of the ES is informed by contentions embedded in three interrelated and somewhat entangled facets of the pluralism/solidarism debate/divide within the ES. The first facet concerns the moral dilemma between the pursuit of order and the pursuit of justice in an anarchical international society. Central to the concern of classical ES scholars was how difficult moral questions often arise in the society of states and why from time to time terrible moral choices have to be made. The importance attached to the core values of survival and co-existence of states and the attention paid to pluralist primary institutions such as sovereignty, diplomacy, international law, war and great power management to sustain such social order have led some to conclude that there is a clear preference of order over justice in the classical ES scholarship, particularly in Bull (1977). Such assertions have been hotly contested. The morality of the pluralist order has been passionately defended (Jackson 2000; Mayall 2000), as global international society moves beyond the Cold War context that so conditioned Bull s thinking. 4

6 If the classical account of pluralism and solidarism is attributable to Bull (1966), it is in the debates among the postclassical ES scholars that the order/justice juxtaposition has been formalized into the pluralist versus solidarist divide about normative changes in the post-cold War international society. This divide has been deepened by the emergence of human rights culture, and in particular the changing legitimacy, norms and practices of humanitarian intervention, so much so that pluralism versus solidarism is sometimes seen as one of the principal axes of difference in the English School thinking after the end of the Cold War (Dunne, 2008: 275). Contestations about the legitimacy of humanitarian intervention underscore such a pluralist/solidarist divide. This is the second facet of the pluralism/solidarism debate, which is perhaps the most contentious and divisive. Each side has staked out a position on a number of important normative questions. Are we living in a qualitatively different kind of international society (Hurrell, 2007: 58)? In descriptive terms, has global international society on balance become more solidarist or does it remain principally pluralist? Normatively, is pluralism still ethically defensible in the post-cold War world? Is the purported ethical superiority of solidarism superficial or deep? Humanitarian intervention has, therefore, become literally the battleground for the pluralist/solidarist debates in the first decade of the 21 st century. As Buzan (2014: 95) notes, while both Robert Jackson and James Mayall defend the importance of prudence and responsibility in the practice of statecraft. [and] oppose the solidarist project of transforming international society from a practical into a purposive or enterprise association, Nicholas Wheeler (2000) asserts that humanitarian intervention has become a legitimate exception to the rules of sovereignty and non-intervention and non-use of force to rectify what Hurrell (2007: 57) calls the moral failings of pluralism. Much anxiety about the pluralist/solidarist divide in this particular debate rests on the solidarist claim of the moral high ground with the pluralist defence of order being characterized as conservative and the solidarist prioritizing of justice as progressive in the transformation of 5

7 international society. While moral-philosophical debates within the ES about the pluralist good of order and toleration and the solidarist concern about justice are healthy, these debates are dangerously slipping into a dichotomous and divisive understanding of pluralism versus solidarism as constituting irreconcilable conflicts, oblivious to the fact that the co-evolving relationality of pluralism/solidarism was originally set up by Bull and Wight as a debate rather than a taking of mutually exclusive positions (Buzan, 2014: 93). This co-evolving nature of pluralism and solidarism is again underscored, as the intractability of the international system to liberal prescriptions become more evident in recent years and as the global order has been pushed back in a broadly Westphalian direction (Hurrell, 2014: ), which thrown into question the potentialities of progressive normative transformation of international society in the linear direction that solidarists would prefer. The third facet of the pluralist/solidarist debate is related to the interplay between international society and world society, the push and pull of the ideal and the real, with the moral vision of world society embodying the more maximalist ethical ambitions of the ES tradition (Cochran, 2014: 196). One prevailing assumption is that world society as a human-centric community is inherently solidarist. By the same token, solidarism with its ethically cosmopolitan values could be a mid-wife to world society, whereas pluralism with its emphasis on the minimalist order is integral to the society of states. Such characterization of the contested nature of the relationship between international society and world society has a number of critics. Buzan (2014: 96) notes that John Williams, among others, has made a number of attempts to disentangle the unyielding association of solidarism with world society. Williams (2005: 29) has contended in particular that world society is inherently pluralist, given its primordial ethical diversity, whereas the society of states is at least potentially solidarist because of the intrinsic presence of elements of world society. While democratic peace theory demonstrates the potentiality of inter-state society to be solidarist, 6

8 globalization has made it imperative to understand that world society as an empirical phenomenon can be intensely pluralist, not only by virtue of the perennial existence of diversity in ethical systems, worldviews and understandings but also because of the need to respect and protect such diversity. Institutional account of evolving pluralism and solidarism Buzan (2014: 85-6) is explicit about a need to rescue the pluralist/solidarist debate from the excessive polarization into which it has fallen and to recover the sense from the classical three traditions of the English School that both are always in play. More specifically, Buzan hopes that clarifying the distinction between cosmopolitan solidarism and state-centric solidarism will help remove some unnecessary heat from this debate by making clear that there is more common ground than is at first apparent (Buzan 2014: 170). Buzan s purpose is to build a bridge between the pluralism/solidarism divide. How does he do this? It is worth recalling that IESIR is not Buzan s first significant intervention in the pluralist/solidarist debate. Over a decade ago, Buzan (2004) made earnest efforts to untangle the aphoristic link between solidarism and liberal cosmopolitan values in an attempt to establish solidarism as covering a swath of the spectrum from pluralism-plus through Kantianism to the fringes of federation (Adler, 2005: 174). This particular formulation suggests that pluralism and solidarism are not necessarily two radically different alternatives in the evolution of international society. While lamenting that world society is theoretically underdeveloped and has become an analytical dustbin in some ES works (Buzan, 2004: 44), Buzan also tried to transcend a normative conception of world society as representing the becoming of a Kantian cosmopolitan community, thereby making analytical room for non-liberal world societies (Adler, 2005: 173). The manifested solidarism in global uncivil societies in this instance does not favour any move towards world society of the 7

9 Kantian persuasion. World society cannot be normatively grounded only on the liberal conception of the individual. This analytical untangling and structural reading of pluralism/international society and solidarism/world society divide should not be a surprise, as Buzan has been firmly placed in the analytical wing of the ES (Dunne 2008). The principal purpose of Buzan s intervention, then as now, is not to engage in moral arguments or ethical assessment for or against either. To the extent that Part III of IESIR can be read as Buzan s continuing intervention in the pluralist/solidarist debate, three moves are notable. First, Buzan goes out of his way to provide a more detailed and certainly updated historical account of how primary institutions of both pluralist and solidarist characterizations have evolved in constituting transformation of international society. As Buzan (2004: 167) argued a decade ago, a focus on the account of historical evolution of primary institutions is warranted because primary institutions are constitutive of actors and their patterns of legitimate activity in relation to each other. In Chapter 7 and Chapter 9 respectively, Buzan (2014: 113) takes upon himself to provide a historical developmental perspective on primary institutions, i.e. to sketch an institutional account of the evolutionary nature of both pluralism and solidarism and their intimate linkage by tracing the rise, demise and changing interpretations and practices of primary institutions and the dynamic processes associated with them. Buzan (2014: 135) is careful in spelling out, though, that he understands solidarist values to mean both bringing world society into play in relation to interstate society and moving interstate society beyond a logic of coexistence into one of cooperation and convergence. For some, Buzan s historical and institutional account, as it is structured, may prove to be particularly difficult to read in terms of untangling pluralism from solidarism. While it is relatively straightforward to follow Buzan s account 8

10 of the demise of dynasticism, imperialism/colonialism and human inequality as institutional practices of pluralism, and to understand his explanation of the rise of the market, democracy, human rights and environmental stewardship as institutional practices of solidarism, they are likely to struggle to figure out why some classical pluralist institutions such as sovereignty and nonintervention, great power management, international law and war can be at once pluralist and solidarist and how to make sense of a significant divestment of liberalism from solidarism in this institutional account. It is however precisely the internal revolutions of practices that these primary institutions have been undergoing (Buzan, 2014: 134) and this tangled linkage between pluralism and solidarism that Buzan intends to highlight. In Buzan s (2014: 87) own words, the historical accounts of Chapters 7 and 9 of how primary institutions have evolved are intended as much to unfold the story of the developing structure of international society as they are to illustrate the practical interweaving of pluralism and solidarism. These accounts are provided in this fashion, therefore, for a specific purpose, i.e. to check empirically both how the balance between pluralism and solidarism and the social structure of international society in terms of primary institutions are evolving (Buzan, 2014: 133). State-centric solidarism The second move that Buzan has taken aims at untangling cosmopolitan solidarism in rhetoric from state-centric solidarism in practice. The need to examine different types of solidarism has been acknowledged by Alex Bellamy (2005: 292) and Andrew Hurrell (2007), among others. The latter has noted in particular that there are other forms of solidarism than liberal solidarism, such as The Holy Alliance as a reactionary form of state solidarism and an Islamic form of state solidarism (Hurrell, 2007: 59). Hurrell (2007: 63-65, 2014: 149) also sees the move from consensual solidarism to coercive solidarism as a new feature of liberal solidarism. Buzan s major concern is, however, the unfortunate entanglement of state-centric and cosmopolitan solidarism in the existing literature and 9

11 the unnecessary tension such unhelpful entanglement has caused in the pluralist/solidarist debate. Having divested liberalism largely from solidarism in his 2004 work, he is convinced that clarifying the distinction between state-centric solidarism and cosmopolitan solidarism is a fruitful way of further untangling many elements of the pluralist/solidarist debate and exposing which tensions are real and which merely rhetorical. Such untangling is imperative and is conducive to abandoning the habit of thinking about pluralist and solidarist orders as representing opposed ideas (Buzan, 2014: 115). Such entanglement is attributable, Buzan (2014: ) argues, in part at least, to the pluralists rhetorical tendency to construct solidarism in largely cosmopolitan terms or in other words, to the presence of solidarism in the pluralist side of the debate as the bogeyman that threatens the international order by undermining the sovereignty that underpins the society of states. This has led to the construction of the view that pluralism and solidarism are irreconcilable and mutually exclusive by Robert Jackson, a militant, enthusiast pluralist, among others, taking cues from Bull s notion that a cosmopolitan community of individual human beings represents an alternative ordering principle to a society of states. This classical pluralist bogeyman image of radical cosmopolitanism as represented in solidarism, Buzan (2014: ) maintains, finds little resonance in the mainstream solidarist literature. Attempts at untangling state-centric solidarism from cosmopolitan solidarism have also led Buzan to offer a rather broad, and arguably too encompassing, definition of solidarism. For Buzan, solidarism in the current pluralist international society is about the creation of consensual beliefs across international and world society (Buzan, 2014: 114). It is about the move beyond the coexistence among states into the realm of cooperation and convergence. Following this understanding, 10

12 contemporary international society already contains very substantial elements of solidarism woven through its pluralist framing (Buzan, 2014: 130). More crucially, the practical progress towards solidarism of this nature has been made, Buzan (2014: 118) argues, mostly through the society of states, whether one looks at the case of the EU, or around the debates and practices of democratic peace theory, economic liberalism, human rights and environmental stewardship. For Buzan then, the site of solidarism is of paramount importance. Buzan s state-centric solidarism does not insist on human-centric solidarity as a necessary condition and may not even necessarily be liberal in its value orientation. Where does cosmopolitan solidarism stand in relation to this statecentric solidarism? Buzan s reading is intriguing. Solidarist rhetoric, no doubt, draws upon cosmopolitan values of individual rights and a universal community of humankind. However, under the existing conditions, states necessarily play a key role in implementing and defending cosmopolitan principles. In short, while cosmopolitan logic is the main moral impetus for the solidarist camp, state-centrism is the dominant practical theme (Buzan, 2014: 115). On this reading, Buzan makes one contestable claim, i.e. while the solidarist literature of the ES may be motivated by an underlying cosmopolitanism, in practice it is almost all about state-centric solidarism (Buzan, 2014: 132). This inherent unity between cosmopolitan solidarism and state-centric solidarism, Buzan (2014: 127) asserts, even finds strong expression in Wheeler (2000), for although it is fair to say that Wheeler draws his normative force from cosmopolitan solidarism, his empirical analysis and policy prescriptions are firmly rooted in state-centric solidarism. He wants the state to take more responsibility to save strangers. Buzan s claim that states play an indispensable role in promoting solidarist values and in moving the society of state beyond pure co-existence finds strong resonance in Dunne and Hurrell. Dunne 11

13 (2008: 279) seems to have lent his support to Buzan s notion of state-centric solidarism, when he observes that the development of world society institutions is dependent on the ideational and material support of core states in international society. Hurrell (2007: 75) is explicit that the dense institutional core that formed the heart of really-existing liberal solidarism in the post-1945 period was intimately connected with the relationship that linked the United States with its Cold War allies and partners in the Greater West. Reflecting upon the development of human rights regimes in the post-1945 period, Hurrell (2007: 149) suggests that the road to common humanity lies through national sovereignty, since international human rights regimes have affected political actors primarily on an interstate level and in terms of dynamics of the interstate system. The crucial difference, though, is that whereas Buzan is keen to locate the evolving solidarism empirically and firmly in the society of states as it has practically developed, Hurrell and Dunne are more interested in whether the normative ambition of global international society informed by liberal cosmopolitan values is moving pluralist international society to and beyond the point of no return. The Yin-Yang of international society Buzan is scathingly critical of the perspective that regards pluralism and solidarism as alternative social forms of order, which are mutually exclusive in the evolution of international society. Pluralism and solidarism, he insists, are not separate, zero-sum positions, but are two sides of an ongoing, and permanent, tension of the subject matter in International Relations around which the normative and structural debates of the English School are organized (Buzan, 2014: 86). They are interlinked sides in an ongoing debate about the moral construction of international order (Buzan, 2014: 113). His analysis of the normative orientations of the ES focuses therefore on the linkage between pluralism and solidarism, with emphasis on their relationality rather than on their duality. In his words, order/justice and pluralism/solidarism have yin/yang qualities in which each is a 12

14 necessary presence in the other (Buzan, 2014: 84), as Yin and Yang never stand alone (Buzan, 2014: 86). This is third move that Buzan takes to intervene in the pluralist/solidarist debate. Placing pluralism and solidarism in yin-yang relationality highlights the complicities that bind these two seemingly intractable opposites. Buzan s assertion that solidarism can thrive in a state-centric international society, and his argument that despite its state-centrism, there is also some place in pluralism for the great society of humankind (Buzan, 2014: 91) aim to show the co-implications of pluralism and solidarism as a particular social-relational dialectic in the evolution of international society. There is, in other words, some generative unity between the two. They are not only interdependent and interwoven, but also co-evolving and co-implicated. In Chinese philosophy, yin-yang is a mode of thought which allows for infinite permutation (Schwartz, 1985: 366). Yin and yang co-create, co-govern, and co-exercise power, as they have equal valence (Ling, 2013: 560). As heuristics, yin-yang are helpful in surfacing complicities within conflicts, as well as contradictions within complementarities, thus identifying sources of imminent change and transformation (Ling, 2013: 563). Mapping yin-yang thinking onto the understanding of pluralism/solidarism debate, the question is no longer how to reconcile tensions and contradictions between the two, but rather how various strengths and weaknesses defining the relationship between pluralism and solidarism can be balanced to maximum effect, and when that relationship can be most productive and harmonious, leaving moral possibilities open in any given historical and social context. In Buzan s (2014: 170) words, it is about thinking normatively about the endlessly unfolding and changing problematique of how to get the best mix of order and justice under any given circumstances. Through yin-yang co-evolving dialectical reasoning, not only the voices of pluralism and solidarism have always been fully audible throughout the history of international 13

15 society (Bain, 2014: 166); but also pluralism is historically yang, i.e. morally progressive, and universalism, yin, i.e. morally conservative and politically reactionary in the evolution of international society. This is best illustrated by the establishment of the Westphalian system with the absolutist territorial state, dynastic diplomacy, and reliance on natural law, which was meant to undermine the universal political authority of the Papacy. How effective, then, are the three moves made by Buzan discussed above in rescuing the pluralist/solidarist debate from the excessive polarization and in removing the unnecessary heat in this debate? The introduction of yin-yang as a mode of thought in understanding the relationality between pluralism and solidarism in the evolution of international society has certainly created some space for wider debate. Buzan s elaboration of state-centric solidarism as some real evolution of international society towards more solidarist practices and institutions and his juxtaposition of state-centric and cosmopolitan solidarism (Buzan, 2014: ) may prove controversial and purposively provocative in the ongoing debates and emerging research agendas for the ES. As Buzan (2014: 169) acknowledges, the pluralist/solidarist debate is the normative heart of the English School s conversation. If Randall Collins (1998: 1) is right that intellectual life is first of all conflict and disagreement and that conflict is the energy source of intellectual life, and conflict is limited by itself, the pluralist/solidarist debate is likely to remain at the centre of disagreement among ES scholars. For this very reason, it will also be at the forefront of the ES pursuit in producing creative and imaginative scholarship in future. 14

16 Solidarism, Pluralism and Fundamental Institutional Change Tonny Brems Knudsen, Department of Political Science, Aarhus University, Denmark. Keywords: English School; solidarism; pluralism; fundamental institutions Barry Buzan has written a splendid introduction to the English School as a theoretical approach to the study of international relations. It presents the general theory of international society and many of its tools in a way that is accessible and stimulating to students and scholars alike. This goes for the refined theoretical vocabulary, the eclectic but self-confident presentation of English School methodologies, the clear explanation of the difficult discipline of comparative historical states systems, the refreshing analytical approach to the key distinction between pluralist and solidarist ways of organizing international affairs, and the dynamic presentation of what the school sees as historically developed fundamental or primary institutions. What makes Buzan s introduction particularly attractive is the space it opens up for further theoretical reflection and development. As a contribution to such further innovation this review will discuss two questions: First, how can primary institutions be open for change and yet continue to serve as pillars of modern international society? Second, what are the limits to solidarist international change? Fundamental Institutional Change The notion of primary institutions is a cornerstone in Buzan s introduction to the English School as it was in his first comprehensive (2004) statement on English School theory. This is very much in line with the tradition. In their theory of international society, Martin Wight (1977: ; 1978:

17 112), Hedley Bull (1977), Adam Watson (2009), Alan James (1973; 1978; 1986) among other classical exponents of the English School stressed the importance of what they thought of as the fundamental or basic institutions of international society. More precisely, they referred to mutual recognition of sovereignty, the balance of power, diplomacy, international law, great-power management and (regulated) war (among others) as bases of meaningful interaction: institutions as sets of habits and practices shaped towards the realisation of common goals (Bull, 1977: 74; see also Suganami, 1983; Keohane, 1988; Wendt and Duvall, 1989; Evans and Wilson, 1992; Wæver, 1998). They traced these institutions a long way back in history and their works strongly implied that without them, there would not be an international society or at least it would be a significantly different one. In ontological terms, such institutions are intersubjective understandings laid down in shared principles and practices which are constitutive of international order and international society as such. The relationship between state actors and primary institutions is mutually constitutive: Primary institutions are produced and reproduced by states over time; states participate in social and orderly interaction as sovereign actors with rights and duties on the basis of primary institutions. This is a logic of structuration (Wendt and Duval, 1989). Buzan (2014: 17) captures the durable and fundamental nature of primary institutions and their ontological status well with the argument that they are constitutive of both states and international society in that they define not only the basic character of states but also their patterns of legitimate behavior in relations to each other, as well as the criteria for membership of international society. At the same time his introduction to the school contains examples of fundamental institutional change, both historical and current. So, primary institutions can be subject to substantial change while they continue to function as bases of modern international society. This is a more precise and refined 16

18 conceptualization of primary institutions than earlier ones. But it also calls for further discussion and inquiry. Firstly, Buzan s reconceptualization raises the question of the relative permanence of primary institutions. The argument that such institutions are durable, but not fixed (cf. also Buzan, 2004: 181), is convincing and in line with earlier work, e.g. on the changing practices of the balance of power over time (Wight, 1977, 1978). Likewise, Bull (1977: xiv) argued that the absence of the UN would not mean the end of more fundamental institutions, though it would change their working or operation. In terms of fundamental institutional change Bull s, and in some places also Wight s, focus seem to be on the changing practices of primary institutions whereas Buzan s (2004; 2014), Holsti s (2004) and in some cases also Wight s, goes further to include the possible disappearance of them as in the case of colonialism. However, institutions such as mutual recognition of sovereignty, diplomacy, international law, the balance of power and great-power management can hardly disappear without the disappearance of international society as such. These institutions are, historically and logically, an integrative part of the modern states system. Historically, they were taking shape long before the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, meaning that they evolved simultaneously with the evolution of independent states and before the orderly aspects of the Holy Roman Empire had vanished (Wight, 1977). Divine law gave way to natural law and positive law. Mutual recognition and diplomacy between kings and princes began under the waning authority of the Roman pope and Emperor. The balance of power and great-power management were evolving as institutional practices in the Middle Ages. Due to these primary institutions there has, in fact, never been a naked states system in the realist sense (James, 1993). Logically, an international society can hardly exist without mutual recognition of sovereignty, diplomacy, international law and (more arguably) a balance of power and collective or unilateral great power management. 17

19 Though colonialism and slavery are institutions (or simply practices) that international society can do without, other institutions seem to be an indispensable and integrative part of modern international society. This indicates that fundamental institutional change is both about changes in the working of primary institutions and change in the fundamental architectural line up. Moreover, it indicates that we may distinguish between dispensable and indispensable primary institutions. Indispensable institutions are preconditions of international society as such, or possibly a particular version of it, e.g. solidarist international society. Secondly, a central question is hereby indicated: How can we conceive of fundamental institutional change if such institutions are preconditions of international society as such? How can primary institutions such as mutual recognition of sovereignty, diplomacy, international law, the balance of power and great power management be open for change, and then at the same time continue to serve as bases of international society and its elements of order and justice? The answer indicated in much English School work including Buzan s is that the working of primary institutions can change over time while some basic conditions of international order or coexistence continue to be provided for. In an attempt to make sense of this I have suggested that institutional continuity is related to constitutive principles while fundamental institutional change is related to the associated practices: Institutional practices may change, the constitutive principles they support continue to be reproduced (Knudsen, 2013; 2014). Compare for instance the Cold War balance of power with that of the 19th century post-napoleonic era. They look quite different because the working of the balance of power were different in these historical periods, as a consequence of differences not only in polarity, but also in the practices associated with the balance of power in these two periods. The constitutive principle of the balance of power, namely that no one is in a position to lay down the law to others, and the resulting one that imbalances must be adjusted in one way or another, were 18

20 upheld in both periods. But the central practices by which these principles were maintained and reproduced in the 19 th century were those of a great-power concert, whereas rivalry, arms race, alliances and spheres of influence were the reproducing practices of the Cold War (Bull, 1977; Holsti, 2004). Another example can be found in current great-power management which takes place under evolving multi-polarity. The great powers still use their preponderance for the maintenance of international order, but shifts between the associated practices of rivalry, balancing and concert are evident in humanitarian intervention and beyond (Knudsen, 2014). From these observations I suggest that we distinguish between the constitutive principles inherent in primary institutions and the range of practices by which they are reproduced. In this sense, a primary institution may be defined as (1) a (set of) constitutive principle(s) that make meaningful interaction possible, and (2) an associated set of practices by which the constitutive principles are reproduced at a given point in time, with (3) the combined effect of structuring the actions and interactions of states in a sociological rather than a deterministic sense. Consequently, institutional continuity is represented by the ongoing reproduction of one or more constitutive principles which are preconditions of meaningful interaction, while institutional change can be understood as (a) changes in the practices by which the constitutive principles are reproduced or maintained (= change in a primary institution), or in rare cases, (b) changes in the constitutive principles themselves (= change of a primary institution) (Knudsen, 2013). These suggestions are not in opposition to Buzan s, but rather complementary to them. But thinking in terms of the model outlined above may involve some extra gains. Firstly, it allows us to specify fundamental institutional continuity and change and their relationship more closely: fundamental institutional continuity can be thought of as the ongoing reproduction of constitutive principles that 19

21 make international society as such possible, while fundamental institutional change can be thought of as changes in reproducing practices, and, in rare cases, change in the constitutive principles themselves. Needless to say, this has to be exposed to and applied in close empirical studies, which echoes the call from Wilson (2012) for a grounded approach. Secondly, it allows us to distinguish between principles and practices as the key elements of primary institutions. Thirdly, it allows us to theorize the relationship between primary and secondary institutions, where the former makes the latter possible while the latter offers essential reproduction of fundamental principles and practices and often also designed or evolved changes in the reproducing practices. Fourthly, it underlines the potential of fundamental institutional analysis as a key to understanding contemporary changes in world order including presently the changing practices of great-power management mentioned above and the politics of humanitarian intervention and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P). From Pluralist to Solidarist Institutions? Buzan s dynamic treatment of primary institutions has important ramifications for another cornerstone in the English School theory of international society, namely the distinction between pluralism and solidarism which he sets out to deconstruct and reformulate. As pointed out by Buzan (2014: 86), Hedley Bull (1966) originally presented these as two competing streams of thought in the history of ideas, as well as two alternative models for the organization of international society. Pluralism was derived from legal positivism and the political theory of, among others, Mill and Burke. Accordingly the minimum requirements of international order such as mutual respect of sovereignty, non-intervention, positive international law and tolerance of differences (each state must decide for itself what the good life is) were conceived as the basic organizational principles of international society (Bull, 1966: 52-53, 67-68; Jackson, 2000). Solidarism was derived from the Grotian internationalist thinking of especially Hugo Grotius and Hersch Lauterpacht. Accordingly, conditional sovereignty, a combination of natural (or progressive) and positive international law, 20

22 human rights, collective security, collective enforcement of common principles (by means of international organization and international courts of justice), and the reservation of the use of force for the common good were conceived as the basic organizational principles of international society (Bull, 1966: 52; Lauterpacht, 1946/1975: (esp ); Lauterpacht, 1925/1977: 398). Bull also indicated that there was a choice to make for states between the pluralist and solidarist conception of international society. Though he had sympathy for the solidarist conception of international society, he was clearly skeptical towards it, because he saw a fundamental contradiction between pluralist principles for the maintenance of international order and solidarist principles for the pursuit of human justice. Under the divisive conditions of the Cold War, solidarist principles were likely to undermine those structures of the system, which might otherwise be secure (Bull, 1966: 70). As it has been increasingly recognized, however, pluralism and solidarism are not mutually exclusive theoretical and normative positions, or mutually excluding conceptions of international society. They should rather be seen as endpoints on a continuum with many possible combinations, or as two sets of principles and institutions which can be (and historically have been) combined and mixed in the political organization of international society (Knudsen, 1999: 12-17, 72, 74-82, 89-90, ; Knudsen, 2002: 21-26; Buzan, 2004: 45-50; 56-57; de Almeida, 2006; Weinert, 2011). Buzan (2014: 16, 83-87, ) goes further in an attempt to explain the energizing and sometimes sharp debate between the solidarist and pluralist positions as well as the room for solidarist change in contemporary international society. This is done on the basis of the distinction between statecentric and cosmopolitan solidarism. State-centric solidarism is about the potential and actual cooperation among states beyond the minimum requirements of international order, for instance 21

23 about the solving of common problems such as climate change, market failure and poverty as well as the promotion of values like human rights on an intergovernmental (and thus state-controlled) basis. In this version of solidarism, states are simply using and reforming the rules and institutions of international society with a view to wider or more ambitious forms of cooperation (Buzan, 2014: 116). Cosmopolitan solidarism is about a disposition to give moral primacy to the great society of humankind, and to hold universal, natural law, moral values as equal to or higher than the positive international law made by states (Buzan, 2014: 118). In this way humankind becomes a moral referent against which to judge the behavior of states and take international society towards more progressive, just and stable positions (Williams, 2010). This is a helpful refinement of the classical distinction which paves the way for a number of valuable points. Firstly, Buzan (2014: ) shows how cosmopolitan solidarism (much like liberal utopianism) has sometimes become a position against which pluralist writers have been able to sharpen their own arguments concerning the importance of the long-standing institutional bases of international order. Secondly, he argues that as a consequence of this, pluralist writers have at times been attacking a philosophical abstraction rather than a radical proposal for progressivist change. Thirdly, he argues with reference to state-centric solidarism that the main thrust of solidarism in the English School debates is much more about how to make solidarism work within the society of states than, as Bull would have it, necessarily being revolutionist in the sense of setting out to replace the society of states (Buzan, 2014: 134). Buzan thus argues that parts of the solidarist project are compatible with the pluralist one in so far that they are fundamentally state-based. The product of these points is captured nicely by the formulation that while cosmopolitan logic is the main moral impetus for the solidarist camp, state-centric solidarism is the dominant practical theme (Buzan, 2014:116). In this perspective state-centric solidarist change is possible and likely while cosmopolitan solidarism remains valuable, though primarily as a moral standard and aspiration. 22

24 In my view, the former argument is highly convincing as it can be backed with theoretical logic and historical evidence. The latter, however, calls for further discussion and qualification. More precisely, I would argue that principles and institutions associated with cosmopolitan solidarism by Buzan are, theoretically and empirically, also possible in contemporary international society, in spite of its ongoing pluralist bases. The key question here is whether individuals can be subjects of rights and duties under international law in their own right and whether such rights and duties would be fundamentally at odds with pluralist international society, as indicated by Buzan ( ): The view that pluralism and solidarism are mutually exclusive rests on an argument over whether primacy of right is to be allocated to individuals or to states. If one takes the reductionist view that individual human beings are the prime referent for rights, and that they must be subjects of international law, carrying rights of their own, then this necessarily falls into conflict with the view that the claim of states to sovereignty (the right to self-government) trumps all other claims to rights. Either individual human beings possess rights of their own (subjects of international law) or they can claim and exercise rights only through the state (objects of international law). However, the first question regarding individuals as subjects of international law was settled a long time ago to the advantage of the cosmopolitian solidarist conception of international society. As argued by Lauterpacht (1937; 1946; 1950) the laws of war made the individual a subject of international law before and after World War II with rights and duties of their own under international humanitarian law e.g. The Hague and Geneva Conventions and the 1948 Genocide Convention (see Roberts and Guelff, 2000; Weller, 2002). Moreover, these rights and duties were enforced in the post-world War II war crimes tribunals of Nuremberg and Tokyo. Lauterpacht (1946; 23

25 1950) also saw human rights as something that turned individuals into bearers of rights and duties in their own right, and this view was substantiated with the adoption of the two 1966 human rights conventions, and thus the move toward genuine international human rights law. Since then the codification of rights and duties of the individual and the establishment of principles and institutions for the enforcement of these rights and duties have continued. The most important of these developments is the adoption of the 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the realization of the Court itself in Today, individuals and groups of individuals have rights (of protection in times of war and peace) and duties (not to commit such crimes) under international humanitarian law, and these can be enforced at the ICC. This can, under certain clearly specified circumstances, even take place when criminal prosecution is resisted by the home state of the perpetrators of such crimes (Weller, 2002). The development of a practice of humanitarian intervention at the UN in the 1990s and the adoption of the R2P at the 2005 UN World Summit is another example of the move towards enforcement of humanitarian principles in the rules and machinery of international society. The prevention of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes is not unproblematic, and it still depends very much on the will of states indicating state-centric solidarism in Buzan s terms. But international society now has at its disposal a set of principles and practices meaning arguably a primary institution (Knudsen, 1997; 1999; 2013) for the potential prevention of mass atrocity crimes against minorities and peoples, indicating a move towards cosmopolitan solidarism in Buzan s terms. The rights and duties of the individual, under international humanitarian law and international human rights law, have been agreed on by states but they belong to the individual as a matter of 24

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